Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey National Historic Person

Austin, Quebec
This Week in History paid for use with no conditions © Courtesy of North Carolina State Archives | Courtoisie de North Carolina State Archives  / N.77.10.40
Fessenden inside Brant Rock Station, 1906
© Courtesy of North Carolina State Archives | Courtoisie de North Carolina State Archives / N.77.10.40
This Week in History paid for use with no conditions © Courtesy of North Carolina State Archives | Courtoisie de North Carolina State Archives  / N.77.10.40This Week in History paid for use with no conditions © Courtesy of North Carolina State Archives | Courtoisie de North Carolina State Archives / N.60.2.13
Address : Corner of Nichols-Austin Road and Fischer Road, Austin, Quebec

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 1943-05-20
Life Date: 1866 to 1932

Other Name(s):
  • Fessenden, Reginald Aubrey  (Designation Name)

Importance: Pioneer in radio communication, developed sonic depth finder

Plaque(s)


Existing plaque:  Corner of Nichols-Austin Road and Fischer Road, Austin, Quebec

A pioneer in the field of radio communication, Fessenden was born in East Bolton Township. He left Canada in 1884 and, while a school principal in Bermuda, became a self-taught expert on telecommunication theory. This expertise led to research appointments in the United States where he made a number of important discoveries including one to facilitate the audible reception of radio waves. After 1912 he concentrated on problems concerning marine navigation, inventing the fathometer (a sonic depth finder) and, during the First World War, an instrument for detecting submarines.